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Chicago examiner vol xiv no 46 a m c * * sunday Chicago may 17 1914 sunday price five cents wilson raps assembly of colorado for its inaction failure of legislature to take ( steps to uphold sovereignty i of state leads to threat to withdraw united states troops . i assembly adjourns without en acting any measures to put a ] stop to the lawlessness in the j southern coal mine districts - , i denver col may 16 president wh â– son to-day sent a telegram to governor j amnions rebuking the colorado legisla ( ture for failure to take action toward set ] tllng the coal strike the president intl i mated he is about to withdraw the fed eral troops he sent to the strike dis tricts because of the governor's assur , ances that the legislature would do something the president intimated he ' would consider the inaction of the legls lature as a surreuder of the state's sov ereignty and of its helplessness governor amnions replied that the pres ident is misinformed and informed the president that the state has provided f1 000.000 to pay the national guard be sides enacting otlier legislation as soon as the telegrams had been made public by the governor senator tlerney moved that the senate which bad previously voted to adjourn at 4:30 o'clock request the governor to transmit to the legisla l re copies of the two tele grams the mo.'-ra was finally laid on the table by a vote v * 19 to 11 wilson's message the telegram from the president reads i am disturbed to hear the probability of the adjournment of your legislature and feel bound to rcmlud you that my constitutional obligations with regard to the maintenance of order in colorado are not to be indefinitely continued by the inaction of the state legislature the federal forces are there only until the state of colorado has time and op portunity to resume complete sovereignty and coutrol in the matter i cannot conceive that the state is willing to forego her sovereignty or to throw herself entirely on the govern ment of the united states and 1 am quite clear that she has no constitutional right to do so wben it is within the power of her legislature to take effect ive action accordiug to some member of the senate governor amnions did not show good faith with the legislature or the people of the state they say he had the message from president wilson early in the day before the two houses of th*i legislature had come to iinal agreement regarding the time they would adjourn and that when the governor was giving out statements that he was preparing his reply to the president he already had kent the reply legislature adjourns ac rdlng to senators president wilson was notified last night in a telegram from senators w c robinson tierney gar man nnd others that the legislature was about to adjourn without having taken any action toward settlement of the strike the legislature adjourned sine die at 7 p m without reviving the motion lieutenant k e linderfelt saar wit ness of the militia court-martial and the outstanding figure in the battle at lud low testified at the hearing at golden he had fired into the tents of the strikers but declared he never ordered a shot fired on the camp until after the sirikers had opened fire linderfelt said he prevented his men from shooting when they could have killed more than onc hundred strikers with one volley he also said he knew he was a marked man that the strikers had sworn to get him and would have killed him if possible he told how he and captain carson had rescued several women and children from the tents under a heavy fire from the strikers he had not finished his testimony when the court-martial adjourned until mou day legislature in uproar linderfelt was a witness in the case of major p j hamrock charged with murder arson manslaughter and larceny as a result of the ludlow fight he outlined his own defense however iu his testimony and will go over the same ground when he is placed ou trial with the additional charge of clubbing louis tikas a strike leader with a rifle militants march worries king's aids seek means to prevent parade to buckingham palace speolal cable te the examiner london may 16 home office offi cials are making desperate efforts to pre vent the plan of the women's social and political union to march a deputation to buckingham palace next thursday and present king george with a petition on behalf of woman suffrage although the king has intimated that he will not receive the marchers mrs emeline pankhurst announces she will lead the women to the palace and demand an interview with the monarch the harassed government officials are dreading the approach of thursday society woman sued boarders in home denies they're from vice districts but neighbors object st lodi.s mo may 10 friends or mrs .'. h ingalls leader of the missouri w c t d and prominent social and charitable worker were surprised to-day when they read that a suit filed against her ln the circuit court by fashionable neighbors seeks to restrain her from conducting a boarding house in her pala tial home at 5250 wesminster place to the suggestion that neighbors fear she intends to give shelter to women of the recently abolished segregated district in whose plight she is interested she re plied those girls might be my guests later but they are not here now a woman living in the neighborhood said to-day that a canvass of homes was made recently and at the ingalls home five boarders were found the commit tee the reporter was told protested to mrs ingalls but received no reply from ber 75,000 fire second in 3 weeks mystery investigation promised in two blazes in west side plant the second disastrous are within tbree weeks swept the heppes company's buildings at fillmore street and forty sixth avenue last night on april 26 a 100,000 fire occurred last night the loss was 75,000 two buildings were destroyed burnihg tar paper made a spectacular blaze seen for many miles ten watch men tried to stop u but before the blaze was extinguished twenty engine companies had been summoned the plant covers four blocks and for a time the tire department feared a general con flagration cause of the fire was a mys tery this fact and the previous are will result in an investigation carnegie sends girl about to wed 500 employe of pittsburgh library congratulated by steel king pittsburgh pa may 16 true to his word pledged the girls of the central library dduring his recent visit to pitts burgh andrew carnegie upon receipt of an announcement of the approaching wed ding of miss ethel kensey 3712 orpwood street oaklaud for seven years on the staff of the children's branch wrot a note of congratulation and advice and included a check for 000 a week ago another pittsburgh girl who took the laird at his word received a leteter and check of similar seutimeut and amount respectively and began her wedded life ! happily this week big brother acts as messenger boy jack robbins big brother in the last cahnce boys club who has aided mauy a boy to climb up in life became a western union messenger boy last night and uudl daylight this morning he mingled with the youngsters to learn at flrst hand their hnbits and views of life when the night was over he was able to classify every one of them he knew the liars and the truth tellers the faith ful ones and the shirks the swearing ooys and those woh refrained the im pudent oues the honest and the dis honest all this knowledge will be laid before the next meeting of the club when plans will be made for the uplift of the mes senger boys astor now well motors to wedding pocciikkepsii x y may ig.â€”lie ports that vincent astor has not recov ered from his recent illness and tbat his wedding trip will have to he further postponed were discredited to-day when mr astor and his leride motored down from i*erneliffe to hyde i'ark to attend the wedding of miss anne pendleton rogers to j criswold webb in quicksand 5 hours saved by toss of lariat Chicago attorney times approach of death while sands almost engulf his body up to armpits when seen two men drag him 200 feet over quagmire with rope vic tim describes terror rivaling in weirdness and horror edgar allan poe's story of the pit and the pendulum was the experience of c j bellnski member of the Chicago bar as sociation 123 west seventeenth street who friday was caught in treacherous quickesand ln a desolate waste near east Chicago for five hours the attorney held ln the mire watched himself slowly sink to whut seemed an inevitable doom iso lated his shouts for aid were unavailing when anally he was discovered by em ployes on the indiana harbor canal the man was almost too weak to adjust about his head a lariat which they tossed to him he then was mired up to his armpits dragged 200 feet to safety the rescuers dragged him 200 feet over the swamp to safety and hurried him io st margaret's hospital in hammond ind where for a time he was near death from exposure yesterday afternoon how ever he told his remarkable story i had gone out from Chicago that morning to see a client he said i was informed of his place of residence ou the outskirts of the town and started to walk out in trying to cut off some of the distance i crossed this waste suddenly i felt the earth give way be neath me and to my horror i began sinking the more i struggled the deep er i sank i shouted and whistled but i got no answer i became frantic the fear that 1 would be swallowed up alive nearly drove me mad i looked at my watch ' it was nearly noon wondered about death in a strange fancy i timed myself to see at what rate i was sinking i figured that by 6 o'clock i would be underneath the surface then i wondered how long i should suffer before death would come it all seems like ages to mc now that lam free in truth it was about 5 o'clock that i heard a shout i was faint but revived sufficiently to wave my arms two men were standiug some 200 feet away i couldn't speak but they saw my plight and dragged me out the men were xlck hall 517 narva place and joseph brown 010 one hun dred and forty-third street east Chicago securing a rope they lassoed belinski and dragged him out of the mire ulster chief's home surrounded at night british colonel later explains it is only training maneuvers special cable to the examiner belfast may ic captain craig sir edward carson's lieutenant and right hand man had a great fright last night about midnight the first norfolk regi ment with bayouets fixed crept up iu the darkness and surrounded craig avon captain craig's country residence the surprised ulster volunteers who guard the place frautically rounded up a number of their comrades and valiantly marched to their leader's succor only to find the enemy had retreated the ulster leaders made a vigorous protest to the colonel who informed them tbat the midnight maneuvers were always carried out dur ing traiuing husband not in house raid wife forgives mrs mary anderson has forgiven her husband dr j a anderson and he is saved from arrest because his wife didn't finel him early yesterday morning when a spectacular raid was made on the home of a nurse where the doctor was thought to be while the south Chicago police were forcing their way into the cottage of the nurse lola stafflin 5.14 constance ave nue dr anderson was at the home al friends in windsor i'aik he admitted yesterday he had information that his wife was searching for him so he re mained tit a safe distance from his home at 771 marquette avenue when mrs anderson neeped ont of her iront window at t o'clock yestcrda morning slie saw her husband sitting on the veranda witl ti distressed loeek no nolle prossing will suit mrs staf flin she is determined to stand trial and compel mrs anderson to prove the charge or admit her innocence home rule subsidizes murder says kipling declares author special cable to the examiner turnbribue wells england may 10 rudyard kipling whose somewhat fanatical imperialistic beliefs inspire im measurably less admiration than do his novels made his appearance on the po litical platform here to-day at an anti home rule demonstration and delivered a perfcrvid diatribe against the govern ment for its efforts to pass the irish measure kipling declared that the king and the government were not independ ent of the irish vote the support of the nationalist was bought with the home rule bill which he said breaks the faith of generations this measure the author continued officially recognizes conspiracy and re bellion it subsidizes the forces of boy cott outrage intimidation and murder and it creates a stronghold in which all those forces can work together we've met tyranny in many forms kipling concluded and in many genera tions but now civil war is inevitable un less our rulers can be brought to realize that they must refer the matter to the judgment of the people fire causes 900,000 loss at galveston man is killed and 11,000 bales of cotton damaged galveston tex may 16 fire early to-day destroyed a warehouse of the mer chants _ planters compress company near the water front here and badly dam ageâ€”l 11,000 bales of cotton stored in the building the loss is estimated at 900 000 an unidentified man was caught under a falling wall and crushed to death the fire had made considerable bead way when discovered shortly after mid night by a watchman and for a time threatened to bpread to adjoining ware houses and business property the flames were confined however to the one build | ing philadelphia may 16 fire early to-day destroyed the plant of h bern helm & sons manufacturers of office fix tures the loss is estimated at 100,000 ten firemen were overcome by smoke the factory was located ln the northern section of the city two boys killed in duel over divorcee object of arranged fight interferes and is shot lexington ky may 16 hubbard miniard seventeen years old and joe hensley eighteen both members of promi nent families were killed and mrs daisy adam a divorcee was wounded in a duel between the two boys near hyden ky miniard was accompanying mrs adams to a neighborhood gathering when they encountered hensley a quarrel followed they decided to engage in a revolver duel tho victor winning the widow's hand the boys met by agreement on tha bank of coons creek at twenty paces each fired mrs adams who had been informed of the plan rushed between the belligerents in au attempt to pacify them and fell slightly wounded two more shots rang out and both beys fell miniard was the son of j b miniard county attorney of leslie county mrs adams wa recently divorced personal guilt scheme in trust bill defended representative adamson says male factors should go to prison washington may 16 defending the personal guilt scheme that runs through the proposed uew trust legisla tion chairman adamson of the house interstate and foreign commerce com mittee says in his report there is but one way to make male factors fear the law and that ls to in flict personal punishments punishments which fina a corporation are nugatory the fines are paid out of the treasury of the corporation and no one suffers in the flesh youth playing with gun kills small boy cartridge explodes when he tries to extract it the life of four-year-old ignatz striniic idi emerald avenue was sacrificed last night because an elder ceimpanion charles martin jr grandson of former alder man charles martin was playing with a rifle martin in thc center of a throng or boys on west thirty-fifth strcet was trying to extract a cartridge from the gun lie struck the cement sidewalk witb the rifle and tlie cartridge was dis charged it struck the sti-iniie boy in the abdomen and be died in the i'rovi dent hospital a few hours later martin who is fourteen years ld ran to his home at 3035 emerald avenue two banks close boy financiers over-loan brookline commercial and sav ings and midway commercial and savings conducted by ex partners suspend business w c forsberg 26 years old head of s Chicago av house says failure is due to making loans in excess of deposits two more private banks were added yesterday to the already long list of fail ures when the brookline commercial & savings bank at 7145 south Chicago ave nue and the midway commercial & sav ings bank at 6103 cottage grove avenue failed to open their doors b'ifty thou sand dollars in deposits is tied up in the two banks transactious by his own admission w r forsberg president of the brookline bank a boy banker twenty-six years old is respon sible for the troubles of both institu tions i made loans that i couldu't collect that's all was his explanation last night eorsberg's story is that of un ambitious youth who wanted to become a banker and who taking advantage of the law which permits such a step rented a build ing put his name on a sign and began to accept deposits and so just became a banker bankers loan to each other with a fine disregard for the usual methods of bankers he took a fresh start each day accepted deposits as they came and made loans offhand without knowing bow he stood the president of the midway bank is joseph asburst an associate of fore berg and much of the money which each needs to pay his depositors has been loaned to the other forsberg says that if be cau borrow the money this morning he wlll reopen his bank if not he will have to admit he is beaten if there is a run by depositors i will be helpless to meet it he admitted probability that the state authorities will step in and take a hand in fors berg's affairs became apparent last night when it was learned that bis bank bad accepted deposits np until closing beiur friday afternoon when questioned upon this forsberg declared tbat he did not know lie was insolvent at the time but wouldn't your books show it be was asueel books not very straight i don't know lie replie d my it<top.s aren't very straight tbey might and they might not any way 1 was down town trying to g'.*t some money wben those deposits were made and so how e-ieiild i atop theni yon diiin't leave instructions then not to accept deposits was asked no i db'n'l think aboat it the trouble was precipitated when oilier south sid hanks principally the first xational bank of englew 1 refused to cash checks on lhe brookline bank i"x bewitching widow exiled 200 a month to quit city hunted millionaire thorne mrs grace t wells leaves chi cago for life after a quest for montgomery ward head mrs grace truett wells the charmiug widow who came to Chicago three years ago and met with many lively adventures while in this city left last night on the overland limited for california mrs wells traveled alone taking a pri vate compartment a lone friend a wom an was at the station to bid her good-by both women were in tears at the parting they knew they were not to meet agaiu for a long time as mrs wells was going to california to live and it was under stood tbat she was not to return to chi cago at least during the lifetime of a prominent and wealthy man despite the tears of tl*e t'.,*o women there scarcely was any hardship in the departure of mrs wells except the break ing of ties of friendship which she formed during her sojourn iu Chicago 200 a month for life in fact mrs wells bas little cause for worry about her future because it is un dersii.o.l that a contract she signed yes terday divorcing her from Chicago con veyed to her a home in california and an income of 00 a month for life should she keep the terms of tlie contract by giving hieago a wide bertb and not meeting or in any way interfering with the usual calm anil even life of her mil lionaire be_befact.r it was held by lawyers that this agree ment though it should be recorded wonld not hold should ii he made a matter of dispute in the courts imt both parties to tlie contract and till others interested are quite sure that it will be kept to the letter the fortunes and adventures of mrs weils which brought her name to the attention of tin public took a change some nieeeiihs aire she seemed suddenly to lose iniete'st iu lively resorts an.l com panions anil was seen ouly occasionally at her home but that her fortunes had improved mrs grace truett wells who has left Chicago for life in exchange for an annuity of 2,400 a year * 7 > o.o tp kafy2*_**7 william c thorne whom mrs wells sought at french lick springs morgan not to sell his art treasures experts called in merely to select worthy works new york may lu the fact that j p morgan jr has called in three art xpert of international repute to in spect and pass upon the morgan art col lection does not mean that auy of the treasures are to be sold and lost to new york this statement was made to night by one of the best kn.iwn art ex ports in ibis e-ity the experts are t scire the works worthy of a place in the metropolitan museum of art rush pennsylvania recruits is order philadelphia may i(l orders is sued in e ashington have been received at a dozen or more recruiting stations throughout pennsylvania to rush all avail able mien tee t i,i philadelphia navy yard where uhother re i ueut of marines is to ite l.iohi.i-cel as soon as possible the orders stated tbat recruiting officers shall let down eii tlie rigid physical examina tion and open the way for a bigger eu llâ€”.tnieut huerta is forced to reply on killing of parks dictator in dispatch to spanish envoy at washington finally promises to investigate disap pearance of american soldier rebels on west coast capture three more towns carranza's nephew wrecks federal war ship with bomb from aircraft washington may 16 ambassado riano cf spain received a dispatch to day from the huerta government . romis iug to look into tha disappearance oi private samuel parks of the twenty eighth infantry this was communicated to the state department it is the only message from huerta ir llicatii ig a willingness to pay attention to the repeated demands ot this government secretary bryan said he had received no proof that parks was executed by tha federals the brazilian envoy in mexico city who represents the united states and general funston have both been told repeatedly that parks was killed and his body destroyed it is the opln iou of the war department officials tbat parks was executed no news of doster in the case of edward depew doste the examiner correspondent the state ue partment to-day received this telegren t from the brazilian minister with reference to edward depew doster all efforts to ascertain hia whereabouts have been absolutely fruitless i will keep on trying to dis cover where he is the counselor of the state department said to-day tbat a j sutton a wash ington newspaper man was arrested at cordoba because it was supposed he waa doster this shows that notwithstand ing the parole given doster by minister cardosa the huerta government is pur suing him for some reason prepare story on parks special cable to the examiner vera cruz may 16 a federal ma jor last night took two federal lieuten ants and four soldiers from tejeria to mexico city to make a full report of the killing of private parks at tembladera it is said they will report that the fed eral outpost saw parks riding a black horse and leading another and that when parks saw the outpost he reached for hi pistol whereupon they shot him the horses which were in a box car on thursday at tembladera were sent up the road yesterday officers talking among themselves at tembladera decided upon this story as the one they would tell iu mexico city as a plausible reason for killing parks rebels take three towns durango mexico may 16 general lucio blanco commander of the tampico division of the constitutionalist army to day reported to general carranza that after a bloody battle lasting forty-nine hours the constitutionalists drove the federal garrison out of tepic and occu pied the city tepic is a short distance inland from the pacific ocean and is con sidered one of the most important cities in the western portion of the republic simultaneous with the capture by tha constitutionalists of tepic general rafael buelua captured the port of san bias while a small division of the rebel army occupied ixqnlntlan general carranza left this city feir sombrete zacatecas for the purpose of organizing the civil government federals re-enforce garrison with tepic in the hands of the con stitutionalists and the entire country surrounding it free from federals the advance by general lvaro obregon to guadalajara the capital of jalisco will not be impeded the combined armies of general obregon general blanco and general buelua will concentrate in teplo for the advance against guadalajara reports brought to general obregon from guadalajara are to the effect that the federal garrison of guadalajara ls beiug strongly re-enforced by recruits continued on 11th page 2d column continued on 11th page 4th column look who's here well if it isn't the katzenjanmier kids 7 â€” back again next sunday w m ______ i g t-a_ft \ Chicago and vicinity fair â€” c^^^^l_m sunda >' and monda y slowly rising 4=jtt%t4 temperature gentle variable winds ip-?-''?sÂ§Â§pfift3f ti mpera'-ures yesterday y&si&as-w 1i '-' liest 01 â–º v u â€¢*, lowest 47 Â„ hjk s i_i * average 54 this edition consists of l-news s-city life 7-want ads f 2 news "*-â€¢Â«. editorial real estate foreign fiction financial autos drama b magazine j_sports y music %â€” comics half-tone picture of starved rock

Chicago examiner vol xiv no 46 a m c * * sunday Chicago may 17 1914 sunday price five cents wilson raps assembly of colorado for its inaction failure of legislature to take ( steps to uphold sovereignty i of state leads to threat to withdraw united states troops . i assembly adjourns without en acting any measures to put a ] stop to the lawlessness in the j southern coal mine districts - , i denver col may 16 president wh â– son to-day sent a telegram to governor j amnions rebuking the colorado legisla ( ture for failure to take action toward set ] tllng the coal strike the president intl i mated he is about to withdraw the fed eral troops he sent to the strike dis tricts because of the governor's assur , ances that the legislature would do something the president intimated he ' would consider the inaction of the legls lature as a surreuder of the state's sov ereignty and of its helplessness governor amnions replied that the pres ident is misinformed and informed the president that the state has provided f1 000.000 to pay the national guard be sides enacting otlier legislation as soon as the telegrams had been made public by the governor senator tlerney moved that the senate which bad previously voted to adjourn at 4:30 o'clock request the governor to transmit to the legisla l re copies of the two tele grams the mo.'-ra was finally laid on the table by a vote v * 19 to 11 wilson's message the telegram from the president reads i am disturbed to hear the probability of the adjournment of your legislature and feel bound to rcmlud you that my constitutional obligations with regard to the maintenance of order in colorado are not to be indefinitely continued by the inaction of the state legislature the federal forces are there only until the state of colorado has time and op portunity to resume complete sovereignty and coutrol in the matter i cannot conceive that the state is willing to forego her sovereignty or to throw herself entirely on the govern ment of the united states and 1 am quite clear that she has no constitutional right to do so wben it is within the power of her legislature to take effect ive action accordiug to some member of the senate governor amnions did not show good faith with the legislature or the people of the state they say he had the message from president wilson early in the day before the two houses of th*i legislature had come to iinal agreement regarding the time they would adjourn and that when the governor was giving out statements that he was preparing his reply to the president he already had kent the reply legislature adjourns ac rdlng to senators president wilson was notified last night in a telegram from senators w c robinson tierney gar man nnd others that the legislature was about to adjourn without having taken any action toward settlement of the strike the legislature adjourned sine die at 7 p m without reviving the motion lieutenant k e linderfelt saar wit ness of the militia court-martial and the outstanding figure in the battle at lud low testified at the hearing at golden he had fired into the tents of the strikers but declared he never ordered a shot fired on the camp until after the sirikers had opened fire linderfelt said he prevented his men from shooting when they could have killed more than onc hundred strikers with one volley he also said he knew he was a marked man that the strikers had sworn to get him and would have killed him if possible he told how he and captain carson had rescued several women and children from the tents under a heavy fire from the strikers he had not finished his testimony when the court-martial adjourned until mou day legislature in uproar linderfelt was a witness in the case of major p j hamrock charged with murder arson manslaughter and larceny as a result of the ludlow fight he outlined his own defense however iu his testimony and will go over the same ground when he is placed ou trial with the additional charge of clubbing louis tikas a strike leader with a rifle militants march worries king's aids seek means to prevent parade to buckingham palace speolal cable te the examiner london may 16 home office offi cials are making desperate efforts to pre vent the plan of the women's social and political union to march a deputation to buckingham palace next thursday and present king george with a petition on behalf of woman suffrage although the king has intimated that he will not receive the marchers mrs emeline pankhurst announces she will lead the women to the palace and demand an interview with the monarch the harassed government officials are dreading the approach of thursday society woman sued boarders in home denies they're from vice districts but neighbors object st lodi.s mo may 10 friends or mrs .'. h ingalls leader of the missouri w c t d and prominent social and charitable worker were surprised to-day when they read that a suit filed against her ln the circuit court by fashionable neighbors seeks to restrain her from conducting a boarding house in her pala tial home at 5250 wesminster place to the suggestion that neighbors fear she intends to give shelter to women of the recently abolished segregated district in whose plight she is interested she re plied those girls might be my guests later but they are not here now a woman living in the neighborhood said to-day that a canvass of homes was made recently and at the ingalls home five boarders were found the commit tee the reporter was told protested to mrs ingalls but received no reply from ber 75,000 fire second in 3 weeks mystery investigation promised in two blazes in west side plant the second disastrous are within tbree weeks swept the heppes company's buildings at fillmore street and forty sixth avenue last night on april 26 a 100,000 fire occurred last night the loss was 75,000 two buildings were destroyed burnihg tar paper made a spectacular blaze seen for many miles ten watch men tried to stop u but before the blaze was extinguished twenty engine companies had been summoned the plant covers four blocks and for a time the tire department feared a general con flagration cause of the fire was a mys tery this fact and the previous are will result in an investigation carnegie sends girl about to wed 500 employe of pittsburgh library congratulated by steel king pittsburgh pa may 16 true to his word pledged the girls of the central library dduring his recent visit to pitts burgh andrew carnegie upon receipt of an announcement of the approaching wed ding of miss ethel kensey 3712 orpwood street oaklaud for seven years on the staff of the children's branch wrot a note of congratulation and advice and included a check for 000 a week ago another pittsburgh girl who took the laird at his word received a leteter and check of similar seutimeut and amount respectively and began her wedded life ! happily this week big brother acts as messenger boy jack robbins big brother in the last cahnce boys club who has aided mauy a boy to climb up in life became a western union messenger boy last night and uudl daylight this morning he mingled with the youngsters to learn at flrst hand their hnbits and views of life when the night was over he was able to classify every one of them he knew the liars and the truth tellers the faith ful ones and the shirks the swearing ooys and those woh refrained the im pudent oues the honest and the dis honest all this knowledge will be laid before the next meeting of the club when plans will be made for the uplift of the mes senger boys astor now well motors to wedding pocciikkepsii x y may ig.â€”lie ports that vincent astor has not recov ered from his recent illness and tbat his wedding trip will have to he further postponed were discredited to-day when mr astor and his leride motored down from i*erneliffe to hyde i'ark to attend the wedding of miss anne pendleton rogers to j criswold webb in quicksand 5 hours saved by toss of lariat Chicago attorney times approach of death while sands almost engulf his body up to armpits when seen two men drag him 200 feet over quagmire with rope vic tim describes terror rivaling in weirdness and horror edgar allan poe's story of the pit and the pendulum was the experience of c j bellnski member of the Chicago bar as sociation 123 west seventeenth street who friday was caught in treacherous quickesand ln a desolate waste near east Chicago for five hours the attorney held ln the mire watched himself slowly sink to whut seemed an inevitable doom iso lated his shouts for aid were unavailing when anally he was discovered by em ployes on the indiana harbor canal the man was almost too weak to adjust about his head a lariat which they tossed to him he then was mired up to his armpits dragged 200 feet to safety the rescuers dragged him 200 feet over the swamp to safety and hurried him io st margaret's hospital in hammond ind where for a time he was near death from exposure yesterday afternoon how ever he told his remarkable story i had gone out from Chicago that morning to see a client he said i was informed of his place of residence ou the outskirts of the town and started to walk out in trying to cut off some of the distance i crossed this waste suddenly i felt the earth give way be neath me and to my horror i began sinking the more i struggled the deep er i sank i shouted and whistled but i got no answer i became frantic the fear that 1 would be swallowed up alive nearly drove me mad i looked at my watch ' it was nearly noon wondered about death in a strange fancy i timed myself to see at what rate i was sinking i figured that by 6 o'clock i would be underneath the surface then i wondered how long i should suffer before death would come it all seems like ages to mc now that lam free in truth it was about 5 o'clock that i heard a shout i was faint but revived sufficiently to wave my arms two men were standiug some 200 feet away i couldn't speak but they saw my plight and dragged me out the men were xlck hall 517 narva place and joseph brown 010 one hun dred and forty-third street east Chicago securing a rope they lassoed belinski and dragged him out of the mire ulster chief's home surrounded at night british colonel later explains it is only training maneuvers special cable to the examiner belfast may ic captain craig sir edward carson's lieutenant and right hand man had a great fright last night about midnight the first norfolk regi ment with bayouets fixed crept up iu the darkness and surrounded craig avon captain craig's country residence the surprised ulster volunteers who guard the place frautically rounded up a number of their comrades and valiantly marched to their leader's succor only to find the enemy had retreated the ulster leaders made a vigorous protest to the colonel who informed them tbat the midnight maneuvers were always carried out dur ing traiuing husband not in house raid wife forgives mrs mary anderson has forgiven her husband dr j a anderson and he is saved from arrest because his wife didn't finel him early yesterday morning when a spectacular raid was made on the home of a nurse where the doctor was thought to be while the south Chicago police were forcing their way into the cottage of the nurse lola stafflin 5.14 constance ave nue dr anderson was at the home al friends in windsor i'aik he admitted yesterday he had information that his wife was searching for him so he re mained tit a safe distance from his home at 771 marquette avenue when mrs anderson neeped ont of her iront window at t o'clock yestcrda morning slie saw her husband sitting on the veranda witl ti distressed loeek no nolle prossing will suit mrs staf flin she is determined to stand trial and compel mrs anderson to prove the charge or admit her innocence home rule subsidizes murder says kipling declares author special cable to the examiner turnbribue wells england may 10 rudyard kipling whose somewhat fanatical imperialistic beliefs inspire im measurably less admiration than do his novels made his appearance on the po litical platform here to-day at an anti home rule demonstration and delivered a perfcrvid diatribe against the govern ment for its efforts to pass the irish measure kipling declared that the king and the government were not independ ent of the irish vote the support of the nationalist was bought with the home rule bill which he said breaks the faith of generations this measure the author continued officially recognizes conspiracy and re bellion it subsidizes the forces of boy cott outrage intimidation and murder and it creates a stronghold in which all those forces can work together we've met tyranny in many forms kipling concluded and in many genera tions but now civil war is inevitable un less our rulers can be brought to realize that they must refer the matter to the judgment of the people fire causes 900,000 loss at galveston man is killed and 11,000 bales of cotton damaged galveston tex may 16 fire early to-day destroyed a warehouse of the mer chants _ planters compress company near the water front here and badly dam ageâ€”l 11,000 bales of cotton stored in the building the loss is estimated at 900 000 an unidentified man was caught under a falling wall and crushed to death the fire had made considerable bead way when discovered shortly after mid night by a watchman and for a time threatened to bpread to adjoining ware houses and business property the flames were confined however to the one build | ing philadelphia may 16 fire early to-day destroyed the plant of h bern helm & sons manufacturers of office fix tures the loss is estimated at 100,000 ten firemen were overcome by smoke the factory was located ln the northern section of the city two boys killed in duel over divorcee object of arranged fight interferes and is shot lexington ky may 16 hubbard miniard seventeen years old and joe hensley eighteen both members of promi nent families were killed and mrs daisy adam a divorcee was wounded in a duel between the two boys near hyden ky miniard was accompanying mrs adams to a neighborhood gathering when they encountered hensley a quarrel followed they decided to engage in a revolver duel tho victor winning the widow's hand the boys met by agreement on tha bank of coons creek at twenty paces each fired mrs adams who had been informed of the plan rushed between the belligerents in au attempt to pacify them and fell slightly wounded two more shots rang out and both beys fell miniard was the son of j b miniard county attorney of leslie county mrs adams wa recently divorced personal guilt scheme in trust bill defended representative adamson says male factors should go to prison washington may 16 defending the personal guilt scheme that runs through the proposed uew trust legisla tion chairman adamson of the house interstate and foreign commerce com mittee says in his report there is but one way to make male factors fear the law and that ls to in flict personal punishments punishments which fina a corporation are nugatory the fines are paid out of the treasury of the corporation and no one suffers in the flesh youth playing with gun kills small boy cartridge explodes when he tries to extract it the life of four-year-old ignatz striniic idi emerald avenue was sacrificed last night because an elder ceimpanion charles martin jr grandson of former alder man charles martin was playing with a rifle martin in thc center of a throng or boys on west thirty-fifth strcet was trying to extract a cartridge from the gun lie struck the cement sidewalk witb the rifle and tlie cartridge was dis charged it struck the sti-iniie boy in the abdomen and be died in the i'rovi dent hospital a few hours later martin who is fourteen years ld ran to his home at 3035 emerald avenue two banks close boy financiers over-loan brookline commercial and sav ings and midway commercial and savings conducted by ex partners suspend business w c forsberg 26 years old head of s Chicago av house says failure is due to making loans in excess of deposits two more private banks were added yesterday to the already long list of fail ures when the brookline commercial & savings bank at 7145 south Chicago ave nue and the midway commercial & sav ings bank at 6103 cottage grove avenue failed to open their doors b'ifty thou sand dollars in deposits is tied up in the two banks transactious by his own admission w r forsberg president of the brookline bank a boy banker twenty-six years old is respon sible for the troubles of both institu tions i made loans that i couldu't collect that's all was his explanation last night eorsberg's story is that of un ambitious youth who wanted to become a banker and who taking advantage of the law which permits such a step rented a build ing put his name on a sign and began to accept deposits and so just became a banker bankers loan to each other with a fine disregard for the usual methods of bankers he took a fresh start each day accepted deposits as they came and made loans offhand without knowing bow he stood the president of the midway bank is joseph asburst an associate of fore berg and much of the money which each needs to pay his depositors has been loaned to the other forsberg says that if be cau borrow the money this morning he wlll reopen his bank if not he will have to admit he is beaten if there is a run by depositors i will be helpless to meet it he admitted probability that the state authorities will step in and take a hand in fors berg's affairs became apparent last night when it was learned that bis bank bad accepted deposits np until closing beiur friday afternoon when questioned upon this forsberg declared tbat he did not know lie was insolvent at the time but wouldn't your books show it be was asueel books not very straight i don't know lie replie d my it o.o tp kafy2*_**7 william c thorne whom mrs wells sought at french lick springs morgan not to sell his art treasures experts called in merely to select worthy works new york may lu the fact that j p morgan jr has called in three art xpert of international repute to in spect and pass upon the morgan art col lection does not mean that auy of the treasures are to be sold and lost to new york this statement was made to night by one of the best kn.iwn art ex ports in ibis e-ity the experts are t scire the works worthy of a place in the metropolitan museum of art rush pennsylvania recruits is order philadelphia may i(l orders is sued in e ashington have been received at a dozen or more recruiting stations throughout pennsylvania to rush all avail able mien tee t i,i philadelphia navy yard where uhother re i ueut of marines is to ite l.iohi.i-cel as soon as possible the orders stated tbat recruiting officers shall let down eii tlie rigid physical examina tion and open the way for a bigger eu llâ€”.tnieut huerta is forced to reply on killing of parks dictator in dispatch to spanish envoy at washington finally promises to investigate disap pearance of american soldier rebels on west coast capture three more towns carranza's nephew wrecks federal war ship with bomb from aircraft washington may 16 ambassado riano cf spain received a dispatch to day from the huerta government . romis iug to look into tha disappearance oi private samuel parks of the twenty eighth infantry this was communicated to the state department it is the only message from huerta ir llicatii ig a willingness to pay attention to the repeated demands ot this government secretary bryan said he had received no proof that parks was executed by tha federals the brazilian envoy in mexico city who represents the united states and general funston have both been told repeatedly that parks was killed and his body destroyed it is the opln iou of the war department officials tbat parks was executed no news of doster in the case of edward depew doste the examiner correspondent the state ue partment to-day received this telegren t from the brazilian minister with reference to edward depew doster all efforts to ascertain hia whereabouts have been absolutely fruitless i will keep on trying to dis cover where he is the counselor of the state department said to-day tbat a j sutton a wash ington newspaper man was arrested at cordoba because it was supposed he waa doster this shows that notwithstand ing the parole given doster by minister cardosa the huerta government is pur suing him for some reason prepare story on parks special cable to the examiner vera cruz may 16 a federal ma jor last night took two federal lieuten ants and four soldiers from tejeria to mexico city to make a full report of the killing of private parks at tembladera it is said they will report that the fed eral outpost saw parks riding a black horse and leading another and that when parks saw the outpost he reached for hi pistol whereupon they shot him the horses which were in a box car on thursday at tembladera were sent up the road yesterday officers talking among themselves at tembladera decided upon this story as the one they would tell iu mexico city as a plausible reason for killing parks rebels take three towns durango mexico may 16 general lucio blanco commander of the tampico division of the constitutionalist army to day reported to general carranza that after a bloody battle lasting forty-nine hours the constitutionalists drove the federal garrison out of tepic and occu pied the city tepic is a short distance inland from the pacific ocean and is con sidered one of the most important cities in the western portion of the republic simultaneous with the capture by tha constitutionalists of tepic general rafael buelua captured the port of san bias while a small division of the rebel army occupied ixqnlntlan general carranza left this city feir sombrete zacatecas for the purpose of organizing the civil government federals re-enforce garrison with tepic in the hands of the con stitutionalists and the entire country surrounding it free from federals the advance by general lvaro obregon to guadalajara the capital of jalisco will not be impeded the combined armies of general obregon general blanco and general buelua will concentrate in teplo for the advance against guadalajara reports brought to general obregon from guadalajara are to the effect that the federal garrison of guadalajara ls beiug strongly re-enforced by recruits continued on 11th page 2d column continued on 11th page 4th column look who's here well if it isn't the katzenjanmier kids 7 â€” back again next sunday w m ______ i g t-a_ft \ Chicago and vicinity fair â€” c^^^^l_m sunda >' and monda y slowly rising 4=jtt%t4 temperature gentle variable winds ip-?-''?sÂ§Â§pfift3f ti mpera'-ures yesterday y&si&as-w 1i '-' liest 01 â–º v u â€¢*, lowest 47 Â„ hjk s i_i * average 54 this edition consists of l-news s-city life 7-want ads f 2 news "*-â€¢Â«. editorial real estate foreign fiction financial autos drama b magazine j_sports y music %â€” comics half-tone picture of starved rock